Religious Leaders Ask Wendy's to Join the Fair Food Program
Mr.EmilBrolick,
CEO Wendy’sInternational,Inc.
1 DaveThomasBlvd.
Dublin, OH, 43017
May 23, 2014
Dear Mr.Brolick:
Nine years ago, as the CEO of Taco Bell, you pioneered a partnership with the Coalition of Immokalee
Workers and Florida growers that set in motion a new paradigm for human rights and corporate responsibility. For three years, the Fair Food Program has been in operation in over ninety percent of
Florida’s 650 million dollar industry and the changes have been as comprehensive as they are
breathtaking.
While for generations the Florida tomato industry was plagued by poverty wages, wage theft, sexual
harassment and, in extreme cases, forced labor, those abuses are now not only being eliminated, their
root causes are being addressed through the Fair Food Program (FFP). The Program has been lauded
by the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights and the White House for its innovation,
impact and sustainability, and has gained global recognition as the new paradigm for corporate
social responsibility.
Twelve corporations have joined the Fair Food Program, agreeing to pay a penny-‐per-‐pound premium
to their Florida tomato suppliers that is passed on to workers through the growers’ regular payroll process,
and to purchase only from growers that uphold the Fair Food Code of Conduct. The largest global
retailer, Wal-‐Mart, joined in January of this year and four out of five of our nation’s leading fast-‐food
restaurants are already participating. But not Wendy’s. Instead Wendy’s has tried to give consumers
the impression that it supports the changes achieved through the FFP while in fact continuing to do
business as usual.
By refusing to join its competitors in paying the penny-‐per-‐pound premium, Wendy’s gains
an unconscionable cost advantage over the rest of the fast-‐food industry leaders.
By refusing to commit to buy its Florida tomatoes only from growers complying with the Fair Food
Program, Wendy’s perpetuates the old, “no questions asked” market for those growers unwilling to
recognize the FFP’s human rights standards.
We are perplexed and alarmed at Wendy’s posture on this issue of basic human rights. The call for
society to recognize that our lives are intertwined, that our decisions and actions impact one another,
and that we have a moral responsibility to ensure human well-‐being is as ancient as the command,
“love thy neighbor.”
The time is now to answer that call. Perfect what you pioneered nine years ago. Lead Wendy’s
to be part of the common good we are building together as consumers, farmworkers, growers and
buyers by joining the Fair Food Program.
Sincerely,
Rabbi Joshua Lesser, Chair of the Social Justice
Commission of the Jewish Reconstructionist Commissioners
,
Jim Winkler, General Secretary and
President, National Council of Churches, USA
Gradye Parsons, Stated Clerk, Office
of the General Assembly, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Linda Valentine, Executive Director,
Presbyterian Mission Agency, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Rev. Geoffrey A. Black, General Minister and President, United Church of Christ
Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkins, General
Minister and President, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Rev. Dr. Susan Henry-Crowe, The United Methodist Church - General
Board of Church and Society
Harriett Jane Olson, General
Secretary and CEO, United Methodist Women
Ervin R.
Stutzman, Executive Director, Mennonite Church USA
Rabbi Jill Jacobs, Executive
Director, T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights
Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed, National Director
of Interfaith & Community Alliances, Islamic Society of North America
Brian D. McLaren, author, speaker,
blogger
Shane Claiborne, author, activist,
founder of The Simple Way
Sr. Patricia
Chappell, SNDdeN, Executive Director, Pax Christi USA
Kim Bobo, Executive Director,
Interfaith Worker Justice
Rev. Lindsay C. Comstock, Executive
Director, National Farm Worker Ministry
Nico Gumbs, Youth and Young Adult
Network of the National Farm Worker Ministry
James Ennis, Executive Director,
Catholic Rural Life
Dianne Aid, TSSF, President,
Episcopal Network for Economic Justice
Bishop Chuck Leigh, Ecumenical
Catholic Communion
Sisters of Charity of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, Dubuque, Iowa
Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, Co-Director,
Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice and Coordinator,
Poverty Initiative, Union Theological Seminary
,
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